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author: Professor, Rural Clinical School, School of Health Sciences, University of Tasmania,
Brickport Rd, Burnie 7310, Australia, Tel: +61364304585; Fax +61364315670; E-mail: Isabelle.ellis@utas.edu.au
Received date: May 23, 2014, Accepted date: June 16, 2014, Published date: June 19, 2014
Copyright: 2014 Skinner I. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use,
distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Abstract
eHealth systems development to date have had little involvement from nurses. The Australian Government
eHealth strategy was developed to implement a Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record as the foundation to
an integrated and coordinated eHealth system for the 21st Century. A review of the PCEHR was released on the 19th
May 2014 recommending a greater involvement of users in the governance of this major infrastructure project.
Nurses will have a seat on the governing Board. There is an opportunity to provide nursing input into the design and
development of the system. The Norwegian Nurses Organisation call for the inclusion of the International
Classification of Nursing Practice into all eHealth systems.
Introduction
Nurses have had a minor role in eHealth systems design and
development in Australia till now. The major national investment in
eHealth has been through the troubled national Personally Controlled
Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) project. But concurrent to this,
health consumers and practitioners including nurses have been
embracing information technology in their daily lives and in receiving
and delivering health care.
J Nurs Care
ISSN:2167-1168 JNC, an open access journal
sector and pharmaceuticals. This two tier system has led to problems
with coordination for projects and processes across the whole country,
for the whole of its modern history, summed up by many as a rail
gauge problem. Referring to an historical freight and passenger rail
inefficiency caused by different rail gauges in each State meaning both
goods and passengers were required to be unloaded and reloaded at
each State border. In 2008 a National eHealth Strategy was released to
ensure a coordinated approach was adopted so that the integration of
many small systems could occur, resulting in a truly national health
information system. The task has been complicated by powerful lobby
groups from health, community and information technology sectors.
In addition, privacy is a core value in Australia and referenda have
been held and defeated in the past to establish an Australia card
linking peoples government held information. Any eHealth system
has the potential to leak private medical information if access is not
well controlled; creating robust security protocols for accessing the
health information of citizens has been a priority in Australias digital
medical record development. The PCEHR project was commenced
with a governing company that was independent of government but
had each level of government as members of its Board, NEHTA.
Despite a very large investment, in excess, of $AUD 50 million, less
than 5% of the population have registered for the PCEHR [2]. Owing
to ongoing difficulties with establishing a robust national PCEHR
using an opt-in approach that meets the needs of consumers and
health practitioners a review was commissioned in 2013. The report
was finally released on the 19th of May 2014, claiming poor governance
as one of the major factors that has led to the lack of deliverables [3].
Nurses have now been recognised to be important users of any
eHealth system and as such, have been recommended to be included
as members of the Board of the proposed Australian Commission for
Electronic Health, as well as part of the membership of the Clinical
and Technical Advisory Committee and the Consumer Advisory
Committee.
eHealth Benefits
Better continuity of care across the continuum of care between
home, the primary health care sector, the hospital and aged care
sectors is one of the benefits proposed by integrated eHealth systems.
Citation:
Skinner I (2014) Nurses Role in Designing and Using eHealth Systems. J Nurs Care 3: 175. doi:10.4172/2167-1168.1000175
Page 2 of 2
Kaiser Permanente report that they believe that their US$ 4Billion
investment in eHealth has led to reduced infection rates in their
hospitals, reduced death rates from stroke, bone fractures and heart
attacks. The magnitude of these reductions is reported to be
approximately 40% [4]. Booz and Company [5] categorised the
benefits of ehealth for the purposes of developing an investment
model. They chose 6 categories that they believed eHealth would lead
to better health to build their model. They are
Nurses Role
Nurses need to inform and engage with the eHealth agenda
nationally and internationally, both as users and providers. The
Norwegian Nurses Organisation are leading the way with their
strategic document Developing the Nursing Profession: eHealth
2013-2016. They recognise that the benefits to patients from nurses
becoming more informed and engaged with eHealth are enormous.
They recognise along with others, such as the World Health
Organisation in their Innovative Care for Chronic Conditions
document that patients are demanding health care that is high quality,
participative, gives them more autonomy and access to health
information [7]. At the same time the limitations in the current
electronic record systems are not purely technical. There is widespread
recognition that todays electronic record systems are not generally
J Nurs Care
ISSN:2167-1168 JNC, an open access journal
Conclusion
As the population ages and health technologies allow people to stay
alive longer, it has become increasingly important for nurses to work
with the rest of the health system to improve efficiency through better
access to information and better coordination of care and nursing
work. Improved self-management across the lifespan, reduced chronic
illness, effective health promotions will ensure that people add more to
their middle years and that the effects of ageing are delayed. Improved
information exchange, reduced waste through duplication of tests and
better management of medications and better understanding of
patients wishes at end of life will ensure a more efficient and effective
health system. Incorporation of nursing work and nursing taxonomies
into the eHealth system will ensure that nursing is both recognised
and values in the health system of the 21st Century.
References
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